trisher
^Does that happen? I don’t know any women with full beards. I’m not saying they don’t exist, but women with the same sorts of beards as men are very rare, surely?^
And there you have evidence of how very deep the gender norms ideology actually goes. Because just as there are women who could grow full beards (but don't because society rejects that) there are men who have difficulty growing a beard (but don't say so because it impinges on their masculinity). But the concept that men have beards and women don't is so deeeply imbedded in us that anyone with a beard is immediately going to be judged a man. Because of course women can't do it.
(It's also interesting how it suits people to use the concept of "it's very rare" to justify their own prejudices but don't accept the same concept when it's used to challenge them)
I’m not denying that gender norms exist though! Do you bother to read people’s posts? If you had, you would see that my whole point was that it would be better to reduce the links between gender and sex, so that people could conform to whatever norms they prefer (which would mean that they were no longer gender norms, I suppose), and there would be no need to insist on ‘acceptance’ as a member of the opposite sex.
The differences between not allowing men into women’s spaces/changing the language/banning sex-based cheating at sport and recognising that women on rare occasions have enough facial hair to be called a beard are many.
The first is a danger to women, whereas facial hair is not.
The first is becoming less rare, whereas unless male hormones are being taken, the second is not.
The first is a legislative matter, the second is biological.
Laws are made to benefit the greatest number, on the whole, and exemptions can be made if some groups are likely to be harmed by laws with which they are unable to comply.
Finally, and most importantly, I have never heard of anyone being hurt by a beard - whether on the face of a man or a woman. Have you?
It is interesting, if predictable, that I answered every one of your points, but you picked out one in the reply and ignored the rest, either misunderstanding or twisting it to mean the opposite of what I said, and ended with a less than subtle ‘some people’ dig which stand up to no sort of scrutiny.
Why does it matter if we can spot the transwoman? I don’t understand the relevance. Laws are not made based on feelings or appearances - those things are subjective and cannot be applied equally to all.